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Tuna Fishing

Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:01 am
Posted by gorillacoco
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2009
5326 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:01 am
I hear people talk about 'marking' tuna and then proceeding to drift fish or chum for them. How do you determine that the big school of fish on your radar is tuna?

Do you ever chum line or drift fish without specifically marking a school of fish?

TIA just can't seem to figure the bastards out.
Posted by tigerbater
New Orleans, LA
Member since Apr 2011
679 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:23 am to
On the Garmin unit we use Yellowfin usually show up as a yellow & red caterpillar looking thing on the sonar. Another giveaway of it being a tuna is the depth, which is usually near the 100-120 ft. depth mark.
Posted by tigerbater
New Orleans, LA
Member since Apr 2011
679 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:27 am to
Oh, and to answer your question about chumming... it seems that the last few trips we've made there are always tuna breaking the water. Theres been times where tuna were jumping all around us but wouldn't bite anything. You may not always mark the tuna so just look for other signs of tuna in the area (i.e. tuna breaking the water)
Posted by gorillacoco
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2009
5326 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:31 am to
one more question: when you drift fish live bait, do you drop the bait in the water and gun the engines for a second so they don't just stay under the boat? and then at that point just feed out line just like if you were chumming?

i have heard of people using the outriggers for drift fishing live bait... not sure what this would do for you though.

Thanks in advance
Posted by tigerbater
New Orleans, LA
Member since Apr 2011
679 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:36 am to
Never have tried that but can't say it wouldn't work. Most of the time we just feed the line out and the hardtails seem to swim away from the boat. Never have used outriggers either. We're still learning a lot too.
Posted by CaptiveCostas
Louisiana's Other Side
Member since Apr 2010
11 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:38 am to
I hear if you go out there with a horseshoe stuck up your arse you are more likely to catch marlin. Just what I've heard.

Sorry I can't be of more help with the tuna question.
Posted by tigerbater
New Orleans, LA
Member since Apr 2011
679 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 9:48 am to
quote:

I hear if you go out there with a horseshoe stuck up your arse you are more likely to catch marlin. Just what I've heard


There may be some truth to this
Posted by Defenseiskey
Houston, TX
Member since Nov 2010
1653 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:04 am to
Never been but it sounds pretty fun and delicious.
Posted by TopWaterTiger
Lake Charles, LA
Member since May 2006
11960 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:09 am to
From my experiences.....(by no means an expert)

outriggers do help keep lines away from boat.

Also when chumming, burry hook in one piece and let it drift down with the other pieces.

Try to use your motors as little as possible.
Posted by batonrouger
baton rouge
Member since Oct 2009
436 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:17 am to
When we tuna fish we make a couple wraps around the rig trolling. If this brings no success we starting chumming and bury a hook in a piece of chum and freeline the reel.
Posted by Choirboy
On your property
Member since Aug 2010
10778 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:19 am to
quote:

I hear if you go out there with a horseshoe stuck up your arse you are more likely to catch marlin. Just what I've heard.


This was your first post. Please try to bring something to the table other than thoughts of penetration of the anus with random instruments.
Posted by CaptiveCostas
Louisiana's Other Side
Member since Apr 2010
11 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:28 am to
My apologies Choirboy. Just speaking from experience.

IMO, drifting with live, small (<1 lb) hard tails is your best bet for pelagics of just about any kind. Use a kite and hold on. The trick is finding and catching the livies to begin with. If there are fish in the area, this is usually successful.

As far as "marking" tuna, it's a situational kind of thing. If you're in blue water and see a large mass on the fish finder at any kind of depth, there are only so many things it could be. Tuna being the usual culprit.
Posted by The Last Coco
On the water
Member since Mar 2009
6917 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 10:50 am to
hah. Now I see what you're talking about. Yeah I don't know what to say about knowing if it's tuna. I can't think of any other big fish that school deep though that you would find in tuna kinda water.
Posted by Bussemer
Heading South
Member since Dec 2007
2572 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 11:13 am to
quote:

I can't think of any other big fish that school deep though that you would find in tuna kinda water.



Exactly. Chances are it's YF or BF or possibly bait which is also a good sign.

Live bait - "bump troll" shift one or both engines in and out of gear periodically to keep the HT's from running up into your motors.

Chum - Dead boat/neutral. Let your bait drift naturally with the chum.
This post was edited on 8/17/11 at 1:37 pm
Posted by wes123
Slidell
Member since Dec 2010
229 posts
Posted on 8/17/11 at 11:18 am to
Went this weekend, we used outriggers drifting threadfin about 100 ft back. Barely moving. We saw all our tuna hit the bait. Awesome time
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